"The cause of Tibet is helped by every individual story and together they paint the true history of Tibet."

- Marcella Adamski, Founder and Executive Director

The Tibet Oral History Project aims to preserve the history and culture of the Tibetan people. We have videotaped interviews with over 300 elderly Tibetans refugees—the last generation born in a free, unoccupied Tibet. His Holiness the Dalai Lama advised us to document the elders’ experiences and make their life stories available worldwide.

During these interviews the elders share memories of growing up in the “Land of the Snows” in the first half of the 20th century. Then they provide eyewitness accounts of the dismantling of their age-old society by the Chinese government starting in the 1950s. Many elders recount the devastating impact of Chinese military attacks on villages, monasteries and on Lhasa, the capital of Tibet, in 1959. To escape oppression and to follow their spiritual leader, the Dalai Lama, they made a perilous escape on foot over the Himalayas into exile.

"I have been waiting my whole life to tell what happened in Tibet," declared 82-year-old Sonam Gogyal, a refugee living in a Tibetan settlement in southern India.

"It's truly an amazing job TOHP has accomplished in recording the stories of the elderly. We will be gone but the future generation of Tibetans and the world will learn the truth about Tibet's past, the lives of her people, religion, culture and traditions." - Norbu Dhondup, interviewed by TOHP in 2007

"If I had an education, I should put my story in writing. However I can neither write nor speak well, so it could not be done. Today you have given me a great opportunity to tell my life experiences and I am very grateful to you. I feel I have received a golden opportunity." - Thupten Chonphel